THIRD DIVISION
[G.R. No. 138385. January 16, 2001]
PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee, vs. RUSTICO
TILOS and MATEO MAHINAY (at large), accused.
RUSTICO TILOS, accused-appellant.
D E C I S I O N
GONZAGA-REYES,
J.:
Upon a finding of
conspiracy with accused-at-large, accused-appellant was convicted of murder and
sentenced to reclusion perpetua by the Regional Trial Court (Branch 34)
of Dumaguete City. Pertinent portions
of the information under which the two accused were charged read:
The undersigned 2nd Asst. Prov’l. Prosecutor hereby accuses RUSTICO TILOS and MATEO MAHINAY of the crime of Murder, committed as follows:
That on or about 7:00 in the evening of April 1, 1994, at Poblacion, Ayungon, Negros Oriental, Philippines and within the jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the above-named accused, conspiring together, confederating with and mutually helping one another, with intent to kill and taking advantage of superior strength, did then and there willfully, unlawfully and feloniously ATTACK, ASSAULT and BOX one Teotimo Narciso, a sickly man who was 60 years of age, causing injuries on different parts of his body and as a result of said injuries said Teotimo Narciso died about two (2) days thereafter, to the damage and prejudice of the heirs of the same victim.
An act defined and penalized by Art. 248 of the Revised Penal Code.
The offense is attended by the aggravating circumstance of disregard of respect due to age.
xxx[1]
The material witnesses of
the prosecution included three eyewitnesses, and the doctor who attended to the
victim and issued the death certificate.
The eyewitnesses included the victim’s wife and daughter.
Geralyn Narciso, the
12-year old daughter of the victim, was on her way to a neighbor’s house to
watch a betamax movie when she came upon accused-appellant inflicting fist
blows on her father. From a distance of
about 15 meters, she saw accused-appellant holding the victim by the nape with
his right hand, and boxing him on the abdomen with his left hand.[2] Geralyn called to her mother, Florida
Narciso, for help and the latter arrived and pulled the victim away from
accused-appellant. While Florida was
hugging the victim, accused-at-large Mateo Mahinay came from behind them and
struck the victim three times: on the left eye, the right eye, and the nape.[3] The victim fell to the ground. Florida sought the help of two bystanders,
Mercy Siquijod and Paniong Agustino, in bringing the victim home. Teotimo Narciso died two days later.
Geralyn positively
identified accused-appellant in the courtroom.
She claimed that she knew both of the accused well because
accused-appellant was their neighbor and accused-at-large often visited her
uncle.
The second eyewitness,
Eduardo Devero, also a resident of Poblacion, Ayungon, Negros Oriental, came to
know of a “quarrel” from a certain Elsa.
Upon his arrival at the crime scene, he saw Teotimo Narciso being
collared by accused-appellant. Teotimo
was in a squatting position and accused-appellant appeared to be forcing him to
stand up, while boxing him on the abdomen.
Then accused-appellant held Teotimo on the nape and punched him on the
chest several times. Thereafter
accused-at-large boxed Teotimo on the right eye and nape, causing the latter to
collapse to the ground. Geralyn then
shouted to her mother for help, and Florida led her husband away with the help
of some other persons.
Rogelio Mollenido, a
neighbor of the victim, testified on the latter’s sickly condition at the time
of the attack. He recalled that in 1992
Teotimo Narciso suffered a stroke; he has since walked in a stooping manner and
stuttered when he talked, rendering his speech incoherent.
Mollenido’s observations
were corroborated by the victim’s wife, Florida Narciso, who described her
husband as “an invalid” since his heart attack on February 16, 1992. Before the stroke, the victim worked as a
carpenter aide to support his wife and their ten children. At the time of her husband’s death, Florida
was the sole breadwinner of their family.
Florida testified that
she also witnessed the beating up of her husband. She narrated that she heard her daughter, Geralyn, call out “Ma,
Papa is being manhandled,” at which she rushed to her husband and pulled him
away from accused-appellant. As she
pulled and hugged her husband, accused-at-large boxed him on the nape and he
fell to the ground.[4] When she reported the matter to the police,
SPO2 Nicolas Indico, the investigator who entertained her complaint, refused to
include the name of accused-appellant in the police blotter.[5] The victim was treated at the Bindoy
District Hospital, where she requested for a photographer named Serapio dela
Serna to take pictures of the swollen face of her husband. (De la Serna also testified as a prosecution
witness to identify the pictures he had taken.) At the district hospital, she was advised to bring her husband to
the Negros Oriental Provincial Hospital for further treatment, where he died on
April 3, 1994.
Dr. Dante Domingo
remembers performing a brain operation on Teotimo Narciso. The patient had a hematoma, a sizeable blood
clot on the right side of his brain, which caused compression of the brain’s
vital centers and eventually led to the patient’s death.[6] At the time of the incident, Dr. Domingo was
the chairman of the Department of Surgery of the Negros Oriental Provincial
Hospital. Although not a neurosurgeon,
he was experienced in trauma cases and had undergone a six-month training
course in neuro-head trauma at the National Orthopedic Hospital.[7] Dr. Domingo stated that it is possible for
the trauma that caused the head injury of the victim to have been brought about
by heavy fistblows on the head or neck,[8] but he does not believe it could have been
caused by fistblows on the abdomen.[9] The defense admitted the injuries as
indicated in the death certificate issued by Dr. Domingo dated April 3, 1994.[10]
Accused-appellant himself
took the stand as a defense witness. He
denied the allegations of Geralyn Narciso and Eduardo Devero that he punched
the victim on the chest and abdomen.
Instead, he insisted that he averted a fight between the victim, on one
hand, and Dodong Abordo and Litoy Romano, on the other. Going by his version of the incident,
Teotimo Narciso was standing at the intersection of Barangays Tambo and
Poblacion, Ayungon when Dodong Abordo poured cold water on his (Teotimo’s) back
as a prank. Angered, the victim picked
up a bamboo stick and attempted to hit Abordo; instead he hit Romano, who was
nearby, and who tried to hit him back.
As accused-appellant was a barangay councilman, he stepped in and
pacified the parties; then he instructed Teotimo Narciso to go home as he was
causing trouble. While he was leading
the victim away, accused-at-large struck the victim from behind, causing the
latter to collapse. Then Geralyn
Narciso called out, “Igo na Tio Mat, patay na si papa.” (That’s enough, Uncle
Mat, Father is already dead.)[11]11 TSN, July 9, 1997, 3.11 One Berto Rubio pulled accused-at-large away
from the victim, and when asked why he attacked the latter, accused-at-large
allegedly answered that it was because the victim was causing trouble. Florida Narciso then arrived and brought her
husband home.
The trial court, noted,
however, that accused-appellant’s testimony, which ran the course of four
hearings, was confusing and fraught with innumerable inconsistencies on
material points.[12] At one point, he stated that Litoy Romano
was not hit by the victim.[13] Then he claimed that a certain Popet also
tried to hit the victim,[14] and added that one Nadette Deluvio also
pacified Teotimo Narciso.[15] At another portion of his statement, he was
not sure where Teotimo Narciso got the bamboo stick he used to strike at Dodong
Abordo;[16] then, he claimed that Teotimo got the stick
from the side of the road where there was a wooden fence.[17] Then he tried to imply that he did not
actually see the victim strike with the bamboo stick as he was only told about
it.[18] Once he declared that he saw
accused-at-large box the victim;[19] next he denied actually seeing it happen,
but only heard an “impact”.[20]
The other defense witnesses
fared no better in the assessment of the trial court. Jun Eric dela Zerna, a neighbor of both the victim and
accused-appellant, was also an eyewitness to the incident. He said he was at the store of a certain
Tasing when Teotimo Narciso, who was sitting under a coffee tree, was
approached by accused-appellant and told to go home because he was causing
trouble. Teotimo was about to heed
accused-appellant’s advice when Litoy Romano suddenly attacked him. Then accused-at-large hit Teotimo on the mouth,
at which accused-appellant cried out, “That’s enough, Dong!”[21]; nonetheless, accused-at-large kept hitting
Teotimo. When Florida Narciso arrived,
accused-appellant told her to bring her husband home.
On cross-examination,
however, dela Zerna admitted that the contents of his affidavit were not true
as he was forced and threatened into signing it by the “witnesses of Rustico
Tilos”.[22] He recanted on his affidavit and said that
it was not true that Teotimo Narciso was drunk at the time,[23] and that he saw Teotimo beat Litoy Romano
and Dodong Abordo with a stick.[24] It was also not true that accused-appellant
pacified the victim.[25] He said that the portions of his affidavit
which were untrue were upon the advice of one Atty. Timtim.[26]
SPO2 Nicolas Indico, the
investigating officer that Florida Narciso named as the one who refused to
enter accused-appellant’s name in the police blotter report, insisted that
Florida did not mention any person other than accused-at-large Mateo Mahinay. Justifying the failure of the police to
investigate the incident when it happened, he said it was because Florida left
immediately after reporting that it was just a small matter.[27]
Senior Inspector Zacarias
Rodriguez, the Chief of Police of Tanjay, Negros Oriental, identified the certification
issued by him respecting the entry in the police blotter prepared by SPO2
Indico.
The trial court, however,
dismissed accused-appellant’s reliance on the testimony of SPO2 Indico and the
police blotter report naming only Mateo Mahinay in this manner:
The accused tried to rely on the police blotter as recorded by SPO2
Nicolas Indico who was presented as a defense witness. The court takes cognizance of the fact that
police blotters are on many occasions inaccurate and do not reflect the entire
account of what actually transpired.
Also, the court is not persuaded to give full credence to the assertion
of SPO2 Nicolas Indico that when Florida Narciso went to their police station
to report the mauling incident involving her old and sickly husband, she only
mentioned the name of co-accused Mateo Mahinay and did not mention the name of
accused Rustico Tilos as a co-assailant.
Firstly, SPO2 Indico admitted that actually he was not the officer of
the day then but simply assumed the responsibility of recording because the
other policemen allegedly responded to an incident involving a hand
grenade-wielding person. Yet, he could
not show in the police blotter, which he brought, the incident involving the
hand grenade. Secondly, he mentioned
that he did not respond to the police report of Florida because the latter
allegedly left and told him that the incident was a small matter involving
contusions only. It should be noted
that as admitted by him, the mauling incident happened only about 400 meters
from their police station (TSN, August 8, 1995, p. 13), and he could have
easily responded had he not been negligent in his duties or biased in favor of
the accused. The court gives more
credence to the declaration of Florida that when she went to the police station,
she reported that accused Rustico Tilos and Mateo Mahinay mauled her husband,
but that SPO2 Indico did not reflect the name of Rustico in the police blotter
because he was a protegee of the municipal mayor, being an employee of the
latter’s bank. Besides, it is not in
accord with human experience that the wife of the victim would go to the extent
of reporting the mauling incident to the police station and while there would
simply say that it was a small matter, especially taking into account the admission
of accused Rustico Tilos that even Geralyn Narciso, daughter of the victim,
pleaded to stop the beating, thinking that her father was already dead as he
lay sprawled on the ground.[28]
Eleanor Emperado, the
barangay chairman of Poblacion, Ayungon, testified that she knew
accused-appellant, he having been a barangay councilor from 1989 to 1994, and
attested to his good moral character.[29] She also knew the victim, described him as
jobless and often drunk, and narrated an incident when Florida Narciso, the victim’s
wife, approached her and asked that the victim be temporarily detained in the
municipal jail because he was so drunk.[30] She was not a witness to the beating up of
Teotimo Narciso, but was only informed about it by one Filomena Barraquias;[31] later, she stated that she was told of the
incident by a certain Nestor Ferreron, who likewise was not shown to be a
witness to the incident.[32] She claimed to have visited the victim’s
house the day after the incident and to have seen the victim’s swollen face.
Salvador Deguit, the
owner of the store where the victim allegedly bought a glass of bahal (coconut
wine) before the incident, testified that Teotimo was drunk at the time. He insisted that it was only
accused-at-large who attacked Teotimo while the latter was being led home by
his wife. He claimed that he
accompanied Florida Narciso in bringing Teotimo to the district hospital, and
then to the provincial hospital.
Dr. Virgilio de Guzman, a
Senior Resident Physician of the Department of Surgery of the Negros Oriental
Provincial Hospital at the time of the trial, was brought in by the defense to
testify on a medical certificate on the deceased victim dated April 5,
1994. Dr. de Guzman admitted to
preparing the said medical certificate, which essentially confirmed the
findings of Dr. Domingo in the death certificate dated April 3, 1995 that
Teotimo died of a hematoma in the brain.[33] Like Dr. Domingo, Dr. de Guzman opined that
the hematoma and contusions were likely caused by external trauma, particularly
on the head, such as fistblows on the head or the victim hitting his head on a
hard surface like the ground.[34] He does not believe that external trauma on
other parts of the victim’s body could have caused the brain contusions and
hematoma.[35]
Upon evaluation of the above
evidence, the trial court upheld the credibility of the prosecution witnesses,
especially the categorical declarations of the three eyewitnesses that
accused-appellant was the one who first assaulted Teotimo Narciso by boxing the
sickly old man on the abdomen.[36] In contrast, the defense of
accused-appellant was a mere denial, which was not improved by his numerous
conflicting and irreconcilable statements on the witness stand. The trial court also disregarded the
testimonies of Jun Eric dela Zerna and Eleanor Emperado: the former, for his
own admission that the contents of his affidavit were untrue and he was simply
forced to sign it by the witnesses of accused-appellant, and the latter, for
her conflicting declarations. The trial
court also pointed out that the obvious contradiction in the versions of
accused-appellant and his witnesses renders doubt on the former’s credibility.[37]
The trial court found the
presence of conspiracy between the accused, inasmuch as they “almost
simultaneously” mauled the victim. All
the prosecution eyewitnesses stated that immediately after accused-appellant
boxed Teotimo on the abdomen, accused-at-large began hitting Teotimo on the
nape and face. Citing the principle
that conspiracy need not be proved by direct evidence, but may be inferred from
the acts of the accused before, during, and after the commission of the crime,
the trial court concluded that the concerted action of the accused was duly
proven.
The trial court also held
the killing to be qualified to murder by the attendance of abuse of superior
strength and disregard of respect due to age.[38] The victim being a sickly and debilitated
60-year old man, there was a marked difference in physical strength between him
and the accused which rendered him virtually defenseless to their attacks. Moreover, considering that accused-appellant
was only 41 years old, the aggravating circumstance of disregard of respect to
the offended party due to age was also appreciated.
The presence of treachery
was also noted by the trial court, although it was appreciated as only a
generic aggravating circumstance, not having been alleged in the
information. The court said that
treachery was evident from the victim’s being weak and unarmed, and from the
fact that accused-at-large came from behind the victim to box him on the nape
and face. There being a finding of
conspiracy, accused-appellant should also bear the consequences of the
treacherous attack of his co-accused.
The dispositive portion
of the decision of the RTC states:
WHEREFORE, accused RUSTICO TILOS is hereby found guilty beyond
reasonable doubt of the crime of Murder and the Court hereby imposes upon him
the penalty of RECLUSION PERPETUA.
Accused is likewise directed to indemnify the heirs of the victim the
amount of FIFTY THOUSAND PESOS (P50,000.00) for the death of the victim.[39]
In this appeal,
accused-appellant contests the lower court’s finding of conspiracy and points
to accused-at-large as the person solely responsible for the death of Teotimo
Narciso. He argues that the medical findings, the entry in the police blotter,
and the testimonies (even of the prosecution witnesses) all point to Mateo
Mahinay as the perpetrator of the blows on the head that killed the victim, and
the allegations of Geralyn Narciso and Eduardo Devero that he
(accused-appellant) boxed the victim on the chest and abdomen were not borne
out by the medical certificates. He
stands by his version that he was not the victim’s aggressor, but in fact
defended the victim from the persons, including accused-at-large, who were
trying to hurt him. If, at worst, the
Court upholds the prosecution’s version that accused-appellant also inflicted
blows on the victim, the Court should find him as having acted independently
from accused-at-large, and be held liable for maltreatment only.
Our review of the
evidence brings us to conclude that the trial court’s assessment of the
credibility of the prosecution witnesses and the cause of death of Teotimo
Narciso (brainstem herniation resulting from hematoma) is accurate and worthy
of being upheld. Whatever
inconsistencies there may be in the accounts of Geralyn Narciso, Eduardo Devero
and Florida Narciso are too minor to inflict damage upon the incriminatory
facts established by the prosecution, namely: that accused-appellant assaulted
Teotimo by punching him on the abdomen; that thereafter, accused-at-large
attacked Teotimo from behind and boxed him on the face and nape; and, that
Teotimo collapsed from the blows inflicted by accused-at-large. The head injuries sustained by the victim
from the attack of accused-at-large were manifest in the diagnosis of Dr.
Domingo, who performed the brain operation on the victim, as well as in the
findings of Dr. de Guzman, who conducted the autopsy. Therefore, the only material issues remaining are: (1) whether a
conspiracy between the two accused was duly proven to merit accused-appellant’s
conviction for murder, and (2) whether the crime was committed with the
attendance of abuse of superior strength, disregard of respect due to age, and treachery.
The essence of conspiracy
is community of criminal intent. It
exists when two or more persons come to an agreement concerning the commission
of a felony and perform overt acts to commit it.[40] The overt act may consist of active
participation in the actual commission of the criminal act, or it may be in the
form of moral assistance such as the exertion of moral ascendancy over the
other co-conspirators by moving them to implement the conspiracy.[41] Conspiracy may be proven by direct evidence,
or deduced from the manner in which the offense was committed, as when the
accused acted in concert to achieve the same objective.[42] A finding of conspiracy results in grave
consequences to the accused, as each is held responsible for the acts of all
the co-conspirators which proceeded from the same criminal intent. Thus, it is required that conspiracy be
established as any element of the crime and proven beyond reasonable doubt.[43]
In the case before us,
the trial court’s finding that accused-appellant and accused-at-large “almost
simultaneously” attacked the victim is not clearly borne out by the
evidence. A comparison of the accounts
of the three prosecution eyewitnesses indicate that only Eduardo Devero stated
that the attacks of accused-appellant and accused-at-large on Teotimo Narciso
immediately followed one another.
Notably, the victim’s own daughter and wife declared that it was only
after the victim’s wife arrived and pulled him away from accused-appellant that
accused-at-large attacked him. This
inconsistency in the sequence of events poses a significant doubt on the unity
of purpose between the two accused.
Besides, even assuming the veracity of Devero’s version of the story, it
is settled that neither joint nor simultaneous action is per se sufficient
indicium of conspiracy, unless proved to have been motivated by a common
design.[44]
Neither can
accused-appellant be considered an accomplice of accused-at-large. An accomplice is one who, not being a
principal, cooperates in the execution of the offense by previous or
simultaneous acts.[45] Thus, conviction as an accomplice entails
that the accused be aware of the criminal intent of the principal and knowingly
or intentionally cooperates with him towards the efficacious execution of the
crime.[46] These requirements were not convincingly met
in the instant case where there is no indication that accused-appellant knew of
Mateo Mahinay’s intent to kill the victim.
Moreover, the medical findings of the two doctors who testified in this
case support the conclusion that Mahinay could have accomplished the killing of
Teotimo Narciso without the cooperation and assistance of
accused-appellant. The victim died of a
serious head injury, brought about by either or both Mahinay’s fistblows to the
nape and face, and the victim’s resultant collapse to the ground. Both the doctors opined that fistblows on
other parts of the body could not have caused the victim’s death. While we do not dispute the credibility of
the testimonies of Geralyn Narciso and Eduardo Devero that accused-appellant
punched the victim on the chest and abdomen, these injuries were not reflected
in the two doctors’ medical certificates.
In view of the above
considerations, we hold that accused-appellant is guilty of slight physical
injuries only. In People vs. Laurio,
200 SCRA 465 (1991), the Court held that where conspiracy to murder is not
proved, and the gravity or duration of the physical injury resulting from the
fistblows by the accused on the victim was not established by the evidence, the
accused is presumed, and is held, liable for slight physical injuries under
Article 266 of the Revised Penal Code.[47]
The Court affirms the
attendance of the aggravating circumstances of abuse of superior strength and
disregard of respect due to age.
Teotimo Narciso was 60 years old, sickly, and debilitated ---
accused-appellant decidedly exploited his physical strength and superiority
over the victim, who was simply unable to do anything to fend off the blows to
his chest and abdomen. Also,
accused-appellant, who was nearly 20 years younger than the victim, manifestly
showed grave disrespect to the latter.
Needless to say, we are
ruling out the presence of treachery, such having been noted by the trial court
from Mateo Mahinay’s stealthy approach to the victim from behind, the
application to accused-appellant having been premised upon the erroneous
finding of conspiracy.
The attendance of abuse
of superior strength and disregard of respect due to age merit the imposition
of arresto menor, the punishment for slight physical injuries under
Article 266, paragraph 1 of the Revised Penal Code, to its maximum duration of
thirty (30) days. Subject to a showing
that accused-appellant had been confined in prison for more than thirty (30)
days, he may be released unless there be any reason for his continued
detention.
WHEREFORE, the judgment appealed from is REVERSED, and
accused-appellant is found guilty of slight physical injuries and sentenced to
suffer the penalty of thirty (30) days of arresto menor. The award of Fifty Thousand Pesos
(P50,000.00) as civil indemnity to the heirs of deceased victim Teotimo Narciso
is WITHDRAWN.
SO ORDERED.
Melo, (Chairman),
Vitug, Panganiban, and Sandoval-Gutierrez,
JJ., concur.
[1] RTC Decision; Rollo, 30.
[2] TSN, October 4, 1994, 5.
[3] Ibid., 9.
[4] TSN, October 5, 1994, 13.
[5] Ibid., 26.
[6] TSN, October 7, 1994, 7.
[7] Ibid., 10.
[8] Ibid., 17.
[9] Ibid.
[10] Ibid., 18.
[11] Ibid., 18.
[12] RTC Decision; Rollo, 34.
[13] TSN, July 8, 1997, 7-8, 18.
[14] Ibid., 12.
[15] Ibid., 16.
[16] Ibid., 7.
[17] Ibid., 10.
[18] Ibid., 13; TSN, July 14, 1997,
6.
[19] TSN, May 5, 1997, 8, 9; TSN, July 9, 1997,
15.
[20] TSN, July 9, 1997, 8.
[21] TSN, July 29, 1996, 3.
[22] TSN, September 17, 1996, 32.
[23] Ibid., 29.
[24] Ibid., 24-25.
[25] Ibid., 30.
[26] Ibid., 22-23.
[27] RTC Decision; Rollo, 33.
[28] Ibid., 38.
[29] TSN, October 5, 1995, 5-6.
[30] Ibid., 8.
[31] Ibid., 5.
[32] Ibid., 10.
[33] TSN, August 10, 1998, 6-8.
[34] Ibid., 9.
[35] Ibid.
[36] RTC Decision; Rollo, 37.
[37] Ibid., 39. Citing People vs. Gondora, 265 SCRA 408
(1996).
[38] Ibid., 40.
[39] Ibid.
[40] People vs. Santiago, G.R. No. 129371, October
4, 2000.
[41] Ibid., People vs. Ragundiaz,
G.R. No. 124977, June 22, 2000.
[42] People vs. Bautista, G.R. No. 131840, April
27, 2000.
[43] People vs. Santiago, supra;
People vs. del Rosario, 305 SCRA 740 (1999).
[44] People vs. Santiago, supra;
People vs. Ragundiaz, supra.
[45] Revised Penal Code, Art. 18.
[46] People vs. Quinao, 269 SCRA 495 (1997).
[47] See also People vs. Francisco, G.R. No.
130490, June 19, 2000; People vs. Cardenas, 118 SCRA 458 (1982).